Is George Bush Starting the Cold War Again?

The Global Beat Syndicate, 4/19/04
by Tad Daley

Tad Daley is Senior Policy Advisor to U.S. Representative Dennis Kucinich, Democrat of Ohio, who serves as Co-Chair of the Progressive Caucus in Congress.


So it's not enough that George Bush is fighting a unilateral, illegal, and very unwise war in Southwest Asia, surely creating two enemies for every one we eliminate, and stranding tens of thousands of American young people in a firestorm with no end in sight. And it's not enough that George Bush has surely motivated thousands of dispossessed teenage boys elsewhere to give up on making it as citizens of the world, and to head off instead down the dead end terrorist road. No - now George Bush appears on the verge of resurrecting the Cold War as well.

In February, Russian President Vladimir V. Putin said that his country had tested new intercontinental missiles with "deep maneuvering" capabilities. American defense planners, said Putin, "have themselves been actively developing their weapons," leaving Russia with little choice but "to modernize our armed forces in the interest of ensuring the security of our own country." The new missiles would be invulnerable to any conceivable U.S. missile defense system.

Then last month, Russian Defense Minister Sergei B. Ivanov published a major article on the eve of NATO's latest eastward expansion. Ivanov complained about "the new practice of using armed forces by the decision of individual states," "anti-Russian elements (in) the military plans and political declarations of (NATO) member states," and "the possible reemergence of nuclear weapons as a real military instrument." (In case anyone missed that last point, Moscow scholar Sergei Karaganov helpfully explained that the minister "first and foremost means that our American partners have begun ... lowering the threshold for the actual use of nuclear weapons.") These developments, if continued, forced Ivanov to conclude that "Russia will have to adequately revise its military planning and principles regarding the development of its armed forces, including its nuclear forces."

And now we have the Russian parliament issuing a resolution warning that without certain security guarantees from the new NATO states, Russia would be forced to begin again to "emphasize (our) nuclear deterrent arsenals."

So like a foolish carnival barker poking a bear in an unsturdy cage, George Bush is apparently prodding Moscow into resuming the great atomic arms race that so many hoped had been relegated in 1989 to the rubble heap of history. These new Russian initiatives come as a direct response to three central pillars of Bush Administration's defense policy: